Carannog (Carantocus)


St Carannog by Sebastien Boyesen, 2011
Photo © Martin Crampin

Click to show suggested citation for this record
Martin Crampin and David Parsons (eds), The Cult of the Saints in Wales, University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies, Aberystwyth, (2023)
https://saints.wales/saint/39 (accessed 20 May 2024)

Feast Day: 16 May

Most calendars list the feast day as 16 May, although others list it as either 15 May or 17 May.

More information

Texts

Two short Latin Lives survive in the British Library Cotton manuscript Vespasian A.xiv, and a further Latin Life is found in the Breviary of the Church of Léon, printed in 1516.

Vita Carantoci I

Short Latin Life preserved in Cotton Vespasian A.xiv, perhaps twelfth century.

Vita Carantoci II

The beginning of a Latin Life, preserved in Cotton Vespasian A.xiv, perhaps twelfth century.

Vita Karadoci

Short Latin Life found in the Breviary of the Church of Léon, printed in 1516.

Places

Carannog is associated with the coastal village of Llangrannog, in Ceredigion, although there is evidence for a further lost place-name of Capel Crannog further down the coast near Cardigan.

  Church
Dedication
  Well   Placename Landscape
feature
 Modern Text

2. Capel Crannog, Capel Crannog, (Dedication) Details
3. Church of St Carannog, Llangrannog, (Dedication) Details
1. Capel Crannog, Capel Crannog, (Placename) Details
4. Llangrannog, Llangrannog, (Placename) Details


Online sources

Further reading

S. Baring-Gould and John Fisher The Lives of the British Saints (London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1908), 78⁠–90    View online

Elissa Henken Traditions of the Welsh Saints (Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 1987), 152⁠–5, 331⁠–2

S. Baring Gould 'Saint Carannog' in Y Cymmrodor (1902)

Images

There are several twentieth-century depictions of the saint in stained glass in churches in Wales, including one (with Curig) at Llangrannog. A series of scenes from the Life of Carannog can be found at the church at Carantock in Cornwall. A modern statue by Sebastien Boyesen stands on the cliffs at Llangrannog.

View images of Carannog on the Stained Glass in Wales website